Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Nazi Sydney Sweeney's jeans (video)

Eugenics. Racism. White supremacy. Hitler. Nazism. MAGA. Trump's bigotry and ICE raids...
.
She seems like a nice girl.
What kind of Anti-Israel Nazi is this Aryan Goddess Sydney Sweeney? - Why what happened? - Have you seen her new ad campaign? - With boobs? - No, butt! She's flouting some Germanic American Eagle jeans. - Genes, you mean? - That's what I thought.

It seems diarrhea is a genetic condition. - No, it isn't! - Yeah, it runs in your jeans. - You mean genes. - Do I?

American Eagle's sexualizing ads for Trump?
Ha ha ha. - Trump wears adult diapers because he craps himself, no bowel control due to being really old and abusing stimulants for so long. - Yeah, whistleblower Caspar outed him, butt no one seems to care that he stinks, stands like that to deal with their bulk.

I will be your Leader whether you like it or not
We were being ironic, thinking all the hubbub was just about a single poster. But this commercial has words and is obviously playing off of Nazi (Nordic elitist) ideals and Neo-Nazi fantasies and eugenic aspirations. Even Megyn Kelly can't help but come to her defense: "This is obviously a reference to her body, not to her skin color!" Obviously, American Eagle's ad agency (or PR firm) is getting risqué with racialized double entendres, not satisfied to leverage her boobs and beauty.

First we wipe out the Indigenous then create Utopia

Practical Guide to Deep Meditative States


The Jhanas: A Practical Guide to Deep Meditative States
The Jhanas: A Practical Guide
Author Shaila Catherine has 4.8 out of 5 stars with 27 ratings for this instructional manual. It promises to give access to some wonderful things:

Experience new levels of joy, calm, and clarity with this revised and enhanced edition of the bestselling Focused and Fearless.

The Pali word jhana (Sanskrit dhyana) literally means “to meditate.” It also refers to a traditional series of states of meditative absorption, each deeper than the last, in which the mind is undistracted by sensation, thoughts, or moods.
Shaila Catherine’s friendly, wise approach, blended with contemporary examples and pragmatic "how to" instructions that anyone can try, shows meditators (and non-meditators) how to attain these extraordinary states with relative ease.

But jhana practice is about much more than just meditation or concentration [the misleading word most often used to translate samadhi]; it offers a complete path toward bliss, fearlessness, and true awakening.
From the introduction:
It's so natural, laypeople can reach it with ease.
Jhanas
are states of happiness that can radically transform the heart, reshape the mind, imbue consciousness with enduring joy and ease, and provide an inner resource of tranquility that surpasses any conceivable sensory pleasure.

Jhanas are states of deep rest, healing rejuvenation, and profound comfort that create a stable platform for transformative insight.

In this approach to jhana, we use the calming aspects of concentration to support the investigative aspects of insight meditation. The fruit of concentration is freedom of heart and mind.

This new edition of the meditation classic clarifies crucial points and offers twenty-one additional exercises, making this a great book for both those new to jhana practice and those looking to deepen their practice. The Jhanas: A Practical Guide to Deep Meditative States

The Path to Nirvana (flowchart)


Enlightened? No? Then meditate.
Interestingly, there is a Path to Nirvana. It can be drawn as a flowchart. It often is at Pa Auk Forest Monastery where we trained. The only problem is that this schematic irks some people, Wisdom Quarterly included, for the massive jump at the beginning.

But it works for others who do not find those initial steps to be stumbling blocks at all due to the natural ability to sit, settle, and reach samadhi. Variations of the chart run something like:

Meditations (Pa Auk Sayadaw)
(Bring store of paramis), sit, take up Breath Meditation (anapana-sati) OR Four Elements Meditation until nimitta (learning sign) appears, take it to attainment of jhana (first meditative absorption with the appearance of the Five Factors of Absorption that displace the Five Hindrances), perfect it;

Move through second, third, and fourth jhanas, hold fourth for a minimum of three-hour sits, pursue fifth through eighth jhanas OR go straight to the Four Foundations of Mindfulness to practice insight (vipassana), discern cittas (mind-moments) and kalapas (particles), which together are called "ultimate mentality and materiality," practice Dependent Origination, reach insight;

Jhanas (Rasmussen & Snyder)
See anicca-dukkha-anatta (the Three Universal Marks of Existence,  the impermanent, unsatisfactory, and impersonal nature of ALL conditioned existence) and let go so that the Eye of Wisdom (stream entry, the first stage of enlightenment that glimpses/touches Nirvana, which is the Deathless State, the Unconditioned Element, Ultimate Bliss, the summum bonum, the cessation of all suffering...) arises;

Focused Fearless (S. Catherine)
Pursue further by eliminating the samyojanas (fetters), kilesas (defilements), and asavas (taints/cankers) until breaking through the various kinds of stream entry  (explained in the Path to Freedom) to once-returning (sakadagami), non-returning (anagami), and ordain to become an arahant (fully enlightened being) and live a good, long life, frequently seeing, touching, experiencing Nirvana until, with the passing of this body comes the end of all further suffering and rebirth (pari-nirvana).

Scholar-practitioner Master Pa Auk Sayadaw
Notice a big, possibly insurmountable, bump in the chart? How does one get to the first jhana? Persistence, slow and steady practice, contentment (santuthi) more than a sense of urgency (samvega), which can lead to too much "efforting," or muscling, when it's better to use saddha (faith, confidence, conviction) to rest the mind/heart and carry on even when it seems hopeless or pointless, too hard or too lofty, doubtful or impossible. It is possible!

COMMENTARY
Now you're getting it. (Kalyani)
This path, strangely, in this day and age, will be a little easier for women. Why should that be? It is because the way we have been conditioned. What arises in "meditation" (the nimitta, jhanas, absorptions, states of piti/bliss) are allowed not strived for, accepted not grasped at, experienced not done. And this receptivity to experience, rather than the "go getter" attitude we disproportionately train males to have, works better in the spiritual realm IF one can establish persistence, discipline, and steadiness of effort over what males are famous for, which is a tremendous amount of effort in bursts and then slacking off for a long time. What works in the world will not work very well here, and perhaps "spirituality" should be treated as "play" (lila) rather than "work" (kammatthana).

The Buddha's life is told as an allegory?
It bears saying that everyone misunderstands the allegory of the Buddha's life, because if we ask someone, "What was the key turning point for Siddhartha that finally enabled him to breakthrough and attain his goal of supreme enlightenment?" Simple question. Where's the volta? Almost universally people will pick the wrong event. Most people will say it was when the wandering ascetic said, "I will not get up from this tree even if my blood turns to dust and I wither away" or something like that. That is the sure way to failure and frustration. It might be better to point at an incident the Buddha credited as the turning point. Remember how he strived so hard that he collapsed? He accepted food from a woman's hand (Sujata), he stopped blaming the body for lust and "sin" and the troubles of the mind/heart.

How did Siddhartha become the Buddha?
He realized the futility of penances, tapas, extreme austerities and wondered what might be the path to awakening. Intuition suggested to him that it was jhana, "absorption," which for so long he feared because it was associated with pleasure. But he reasoned that this is not ordinarily worldly pleasure like the hedonistic pursuits of his youth in the palace in Saka Land/Scythia. In a sense, he surrendered, he let go, he stopped pushing. He recalled that at age 7 he had spontaneously entered absorption under the tree at the Planting Festival and wondered if that might be a better path to pursue. A knowing came over him that it was. He let go and let Nature take its course. "Meditation" is not something we do. What we "do" is perhaps prepare the soil and the circumstances for the plant to arise and send out a flower that blossoms. We didn't do it. It did it. We allowed it, tended it, gardened it, protected it, persisted in protecting it, pursued it, and in that sense "brought it into being," which is what bhavana means. It is about cultivation and development rather than doing and accomplishing.

What's the secret?
I give up, can't do this, too hard!
If anyone needs more proof of this, consider the musician who did his darndest in striving -- even giving up music and becoming a Buddhist monk -- and failed. He slacked off and failed. He redoubled his efforts and tried even harder. And failed harder, so hard he gave up and went to the Buddha to tell him he was leaving. He was shocked when the Buddha did not protest and instead wished him well. "Really, I can just go?"

"Have a good life," the Buddha said, "and, oh, by the way, what are you going to do now?" "Go back to music, of course," he said. "Oh, you play music?" the Buddha asked. The man was a little indignant as he was the most famous musician in the realm, enchanting audiences with his lyre (vina, veena, harp, guitar). Didn't the Buddha know that?

Playing the ancient veena
"Yes, I play it very well." "So, tell me," the Buddha went on. Do you overtighten your strings?" "Of course not! That would produce a harsh and discordant and sound." "Oh, so you leave them very slack?" the Buddha went on. "Of course not! That would produce a dull and discordant sound." "Well, then, how is it?" the Buddha asked. "I tune it -- not too tight, not too loose -- balanced and just so, making sure it doesn't go out of tune..." and as he explained, insight dawned on him and he excused him, not having disrobed, still a monk. He withdrew into solitude and took up his meditation object but this time not too harshly, not with so much effort as before, and feeling himself slacking, he would straighten up a little and pursued his ends in a balanced way. And in no long time, he was successful. And he came back to thank the Buddha, who maybe smiled and winked at him, if the Buddha winked at anybody. It isn't hard, but we make it harder than it needs to be. It isn't easy, but if we apply no effort at all, we will never see it. Not this, not that, then what? Balance. (See the story of Ven. Sona).
  • Teachings of Pa Auk Sayadaw and accomplished students interpreted and reported by Dhr. Seven, Amber Larson (ed.), Wisdom Quarterly

Before God said, 'Let there be light'?

Monday, July 28, 2025

How to reach Nirvana... (Beth Upton)


I've no advice, so Beth will explain.
Hello, friends! Perhaps it goes without saying, but I am going to say it anyway: I love our Sangha (Spiritual Community).

A few years back, if someone had told me that we’d have co-created such an engaged, enthusiastic, emotionally honest community of deeply dedicated practitioners, it would have been right on the edge of my wildest dreams. But here we are, doing it together.

When I step back and take it in, it astonishes me in the most beautiful way. Sangha can serve us in many ways as we navigate our Dhamma paths: It can be where we form wise friendships (kalyana-mittas), where we come for support, accountability, inspiration, and connection.

Dad, Delphine (VW), and Beth Upton
Then, sometimes, if we’re really lucky, we might receive one of those rare transformative moments of feeling truly seen, loved, supported, and accepted in our fullness. I had one of those rare and special moments recently, when I received this:

Watch me, or else... If the Dhamma is the love of my life, then Delphine [my VW van] is the second love. Here is a photo of me and my Dad with her a few days ago. On second thought, maybe I should have put my Dad ahead of my van on the list of things I love the most, but I’m sure he’ll understand.


Is there any way to speed up this process already?

So how do we attain Nirvana
(Pali Nibbana) when we’re stuck in second gear? The answer, for most of us, is that we don’t.

Perhaps a better question is why on earth would we want to do that? Why would we want to make the journey unnecessarily clunky, sluggish, and inefficient?


Sometimes we’re our own worst enemies (aren’t we?) holding on tightly to all things coarse and burdensome, willfully keeping ourselves stuck in second gear, all while reserving the right to complain when progress is slow.

I'll get this alone by brute force! (No you won't)
Sometimes we want the best of both worlds (don’t we?), the familiarity and comfort of life in second gear, as well as swift progress towards Nirvana. Unfortunately, that’s not possible.

Let me know in the comments: What’s keeping you stuck in second gear? Let’s get confessional.
  • Is it the late-night pretzels, like our dear friend Dan Harris?
  • Or rather is it the late-night binges of online content?
  • Is it a relationship that really needs to shift?
  • A responsibility you need to put down?
  • A bad habit you need to break?
Can a group go farther than an individual?
Let’s be wise friends to each other and harness the power of this wonderful Sangha to shift into a decisive third or even fourth gear over the weeks to come.

Lastly, a huge thanks to all who got back to me with ideas of things to write about.*

In the meantime, to support this work, do that here: SUPPORT.


With much metta and gratitude, Beth Upton
*I received way more inspiration than I can process right now. For those who didn’t get a reply from me, please know that I did read and take note of every single suggestion that was sent. It’s just that there are only so many hours per week that I am willing to spend on my laptop. I hope you’ll understand. I’ll be writing about those things and more over the weeks and months to come. Maybe the next newsletter will be the one with a button to book time with me).
  • Beth Upton (bethupton.com), July 28, 2025, edited by Dhr. Seven, Wisdom Quarterly

Let's talk about better toilet paper


I am not my mom Demi Moore.
Rumer Willis doesn't mind if you see her breastfeeding her baby, Lou. And her sister Scout doesn't mind if you see her breasts/nipples even when she's not. Rumer's trying to get our attention about the dangers of common TOXIC toilet paper. [Switch to a bidet ASAP.]

Until switching there's a softer, stronger, smarter choice. PlantPaper is one company's response to an industry and a [poor] hygienic practice in dire need of an update. [That's where the bidet saves the day, using pure water.]

A clean butt is a healthy butt, but don't stare.
When this company first began developing PlantPaper in 2016, it knew it wouldn’t be enough just to make a cleaner toilet paper; it had to be a better toilet paper—a toilet paper the creators of the company themselves would want to use—a trade-up, not a trade-off, a toilet paper without compromise.
  • [What to make it with since you don't seem to be getting off yer arse 'n gettin the message that a bidet is the way to go? Mmm, why not use material better than toxic wood pulp?]
Hey, what if we were to use bamboo?
Ah, I feel so much cleaner now.

The more bamboo is harvested, the faster it grows. A bamboo grove may be able to produce as much as 10 times more usable fiber for paper than a tree forest of equivalent size.

Bamboo stores up to 40% of its carbon underground, carbon that remains intact even when it’s harvested. [There's a better choice.] plantpaper.us

Jesus better than Christianity (Edgar Cayce)

Peace breaks out in Cambodia/Thailand?

Did we choose this life?

What is the true nature of reality?

Death, grief, pets, babies (Edgar Cayce)


Association for Research and Enlightenment (A.R.E., Virginia Beach): edgarcayce.org

Origins of domesticated Cannabis 🥦


Green Beret: Israel's worst war crimes

Uh-oh trouble for Gringos in Mexico

Aztlan: legendary Aztec homeland


Is the legendary homeland of the "Aztecs" a myth?

Leaving Aztlan (Atlantis?) for the mainland
This video explores the "Aztec" [a modern made-up name invented in the USA] mythology surrounding Aztlan, the claimed ancestral origin of the people who would build Tenochtitlan, the site of modern Mexico City.

Was Aztlan a real place or a fictional narrative meant to give meaning to a greater truth about outsiders looking for a place to belong in Mesoamerica? It delves into the symbolism behind their journey and how it shaped their search for a new home and history.

Thousands of people are marching in cities across California, standing up for migrant families and demanding dignity—which is reminiscent of something ancient. Way before national borders, ICE raids, and Trumpian walls, the ancestors of the Mexica—the original "Mexicans," the tribal people we now label “Aztecs”—were wandering the desert looking for a sign.

They were turned away by those who were already settled. This story of Aztlán has been passed down for generations. This episode digs into what it really means. Was Aztlán a real place? A metaphor? A strategy? Why ask?

For a lot of us—especially those of us who are Mexican American—this isn’t just about the past. It’s about identity, memory, and what it means to belong.

In this episode:

• The legend of Aztlán and why it still matters
• What the codices, scholars, and even conspiracy theorists have to say
• Why this ancient story still hits hard in a world where people are still being turned away at borders.

Let’s explore the Mexica migration, how “Aztecs” came to be, what the codices say, and how this all connects to today—because this isn’t just myth. It’s about who we are and how we got here.

If anyone is Mexican American, Latinx, Chicano, Hispanic, or has ever asked, “Where do I really come from?”—this one’s for you.

TIMESTAMPS
  • 0:00 Exile or Origin?
  • 0:30 Why We Tell These Stories
  • 0:45 A Lost Paradise
  • 1:52 “Aztecs” vs. Mexica
  • 2:48 The Command: Leave Paradise
  • 5:37 The Journey: Sacred Wandering
  • 7:43 Where was (or IS) Aztlán?
  • 10:07 Aztlán: Truth or strategy?
  • 12:26 From the fringe: Atlantis, aliens, and conspiracies
  • 13:15 What do viewers think?
  • 13:58 Share a story
ABOUT: Andrew Colon tells stories about myths, legends, histories, and mysteries from Latin America and the Caribbean. He does this so those of us with roots here know where we come from—and so that those who don’t can finally learn what we were never taught in school.

Everything on this channel is researched and rooted in culture. It uses AI-generated images to help visualize ideas, but the story, its meaning, and the message are real.

Watch or listen to full playlist: • THE VAULT! The Mysteries of Latin America... Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/12rJLlk... Apple Podcasts: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... Instagram: @andycolonvo Join the list: andy@andycancun.com. Help spread the word: Like this video if it hit home. Share it with someone who should see it. Subscribe for more stories rooted in Latin America.   #mexicanhistory #AztecOrigins #Latinx #Aztlan #mexicanamerican #mesoamerican

📚 Resources mentioned in this episode
  • Codex Boturini – 16th-century Aztec codex depicting the migration from Aztlán to Tenochtitlán.
  • Codex Aubin and Codex Mendoza – additional sources for Mexica migration and history.
  • Eduardo Matos Moctezuma, Muerte a filo de obsidiana – Reflections on Mexica mythology, symbolism, and interpretation of Aztlán as a cultural metaphor.
  • Miguel León-Portilla, The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico – essential reading for Nahua voices and historical memory.
  • Camilla Townsend, Fifth Sun: A New History of the Aztecs – groundbreaking modern retelling based on Nahuatl sources.
  • Susan Gillespie, The Aztec Kings: The Construction of Rulership in Mexica History – insight into how the Mexica used myth and memory to legitimize political power.
  • Juan Miguel Zunzunegui – Mexican historian and social commentator who discusses the northern desert origins of the Mexica in his videos and books.
  • David Carrasco, City of Sacrifice: The Aztec Empire and the Role of Myth in History – explores how myth shaped Mexica society and migration narratives.
  • Mexican flag symbolism – origins of the eagle, cactus, and serpent from Mexica prophecy.
  • Mexcaltitán, Nayarit – real island city thought by some scholars to be the inspiration for Aztlán.
  • La Quemada (Zacatecas) and Sierra de San Luis (Chihuahua) – archeological sites linked to Chicomoztoc, the "Place of the Seven Caves."
  • Uto-Aztecan Language Family – linguistic evidence tying Nahuatl to Indigenous peoples in the American Southwest (Hopi, Pueblo, etc.)
  • Andrew Colon, July 1, 2025; Crystal Quintero, Pfc. Sandoval (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

RATM vs. Zionist Jew David Draiman


Zionist Jew musician David Draiman ATTACKS Tom Morello, backfires tremendously
(Democracy Watch) July 26, 2025: #TYTsports #RickStrom #Sports Watch the full interview HERE: "You don't think I've cried?" Tom Morello... Watch Anthony Fantano's full video HERE: Disturbed guy David Draiman is pathetic

The legendary Rage Against the Machine (RATM) guitarist Tom Morello recently spoke on the current climate of left-leaning politics and music with George Stroumboulopoulos, praising embattled Irish hip-hop group (Gaelic rappers) Kneecap as the "Rage Against the Machine of today" for speaking truth to power and carrying on the tradition of past political musicians. Rick Strom breaks it down.

Got a thought? Put it in the comments! Check out The Rick Strom Show: @therickstromshow. Viewers are vital to this work. Support as a member: https://www.tyt.com/join. Rick Strom: TIKTOK (rickstrom), TWITTER (rickstrom), BLUE SKY (https://bsky.app/profile/rickstrom.bs...), INSTAGRAM (rickystrom), FACEBOOK (stromrick). Follow TYT Sports on Facebook (tytsports). Subscribe to Anthony Fantano: @fantano.

TYT Sports -- one of the most dynamic sports shows on YouTube -- is coming to Tune In, where it will cover all the latest need-to-know NBA, NFL, MMA, World Football [Soccer], and breaking news specifically tailored to the young, dialed-in, and pop-culture savvy sports fan. Subscribe today and prepare to get hooked. #TYTsports #Sports #RickStrom

Epstein Files: Trump’s reaction South Park

World Nature Conservation Day (7/28)

What's better the vertical or Horizontal Forest? Hmm, seems pretty clear (cut)
.
Bhumi Devi: Nature Spirit
World Nature Conservation Day
is an annual event held on July 28th. This day stresses the need for preserving a healthy environment and natural resources to maintain a stable and healthy society. Saving plants and animals that face the threat of extinction is one of the primary goals of World Nature Conservation Day. Also, the celebrations emphasize keeping the various components of nature such as flora, fauna, energy resources, soil, water, and air intact. In addition, World Nature Conservation Day underlines the need for preserving the environment for future generations. We are therefore tasked with the need to leave a healthy planet for those coming after us to enjoy. More: nationaltoday.com/world-nature-conservation-day/